We report herein the case of a 33-year-old woman who presented with palpable abdominal swelling found to be caused by a huge lymphangioma of the pancreas. An abdominal computed tomographic (CT) scan showed a large multilocular cystic mass with water-dense contents, which was derived from the pancreatic head. A pancreaticoduodenectomy (PD) was performed because the tumor had invaded the duodenum. The resected tumor, which was 23 x 12 x 23 cm in size with 21 of serous fluid, was pathologically diagnosed as a cystic lymphangioma. The endothelial cells lining the internal surface of the cystic spaces were immunohistochemically positive for factor VIII-R antigen and CD31. Our review of the literature revealed 45 reports of lymphangioma of the pancreas, including this one, but to the best of our knowledge this is only the fifth case that required a PD. Nevertheless, we recommend that a complete resection be performed to reduce the risk of recurrence.
The diagnosis of neurosarcoidosis is often difficult; the imaging signs of spinal cord sarcoidosis sometimes mimic those of cervical spondylotic myelopathy, which is common in elderly persons. We
Gravity survey was carried out to clarify the basement topography of the Kathmandu Valley which is filled with the Quaternary lacustrine sediments. A gravity anomaly map is produced from 112 gravity measurements within a major part of the Kathmandu Valley and a basement contour map is presented based on depth calculations along two sections. The maximum depth of the basement is estimated to be a little more than 650m from the present surface. Two distinct troughs of basement are detected in the central part of the Valley. The troughs may be a part of fossil valleys of what Hagen (1968)1) proposed as the Proto-Bagmati River which supposedly had drained south-south-westerly across the Kathmandu Valley during the Plio-Pleistocene time.
Angiogenesis inhibitors have attracted considerable interest. The anti-tumor and anti-metastatic effects of TNP-470, an angiogenesis inhibitor, and mitomycin C (MMC), a representative anti-neoplastic agent, were investigated using a xenotransplanted human colon cancer, TK-4. Suturing of small pieces of TK-4 tumors to the cecal wall in nude mice (orthotopic transplantation) induced liver metastasis. Mice were randomly divided into 3 groups; a control group given saline solution, a group receiving TNP-470 and a group receiving MMC. TNP-470 was given s.c. on alternate days for 5 weeks from day 10 after cecal transplantation and MMC was administered intraperitoneally (i.p.) once a week from day 10 after cecal transplantation. MMC significantly inhibited cecal tumor growth. In the control group, liver metastases developed in 9 out of 10 mice, including 3 with more than 20 metastatic foci. Liver metastasis also developed in 8 out of 10 mice receiving MMC, 2 of which had many metastases. In contrast, liver metastasis developed in only 2 out of 8 mice in the TNP-470 group and neither of these animals had numerous metastases.
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